'Customisable' Internet Contributing to Selective Exposure: Study

Advertisement
By Indo-Asian News Service | Updated: 14 December 2015 11:49 IST
The Internet technologies are exacerbating the 'selective exposure' behaviour where individuals tend to seek information that confirms their existing opinion or belief while avoiding contrary information, a new study suggests.

"We tend to look for information that confirms our points of view. It bolsters self-esteem, helps us effectively cope with political information overload, but on the other hand, it means we are minimizing exposure to information that challenges us," said lead researcher Ivan Dylko from University at Buffalo.

Technology allows us to customise our online information environment.

Advertisement

Dylko has developed a model, which explores customisability's political impact and suggests how the "automatic and consistent inclusion, exclusion and presentation of information" encourages political selective exposure.

Television viewers have historically made these choices.

Advertisement

Newspaper readers once had to decide which local paper to read, just as magazine buyers had to choose between Time and Newsweek, for example.

But what media consumers did with print and broadcast is not the same process that emerges online, nor is the idea of selective exposure as intuitive as it might seem, with researchers divided on its consequences.

Advertisement

"Scholars disagree about whether the Internet makes us more politically closed minded, or whether it exposes us to more politically diverse points of view," Dylko said.

Customisability is what separates past print, broadcast and face-to-face realities from present online communication realities.

Advertisement

Users now have an unprecedented amount of information to deal with - forcing them to be more selective than ever.

They have an unprecedented diversity of content choices - allowing them to find content that matches their beliefs and attitudes more closely than ever, and they have customisability technology providing nearly complete control over the information they receive.

"In a two-newspaper town, readers still might look at the rival paper in addition to their favoured publication because the newspaper choices were relatively limited, but online readers can find and then spend hours looking only at content that perfectly fits their psychological and political preferences," Dylko said.

The study was published in the journal Communication Theory.

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Further reading: Internet, Science
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Motorola Edge 70 Pro Arrives With a 6,500mAh Battery at This Price in India
  2. Elden Ring Movie Film Adaptation Release Date, Full Cast Revealed
  1. NASA’s Curiosity Rover Finds Crater Filled With Sand, Alters Drilling Plans
  2. Control Ultimate Edition Arrives on iPhone and iPad With Touch Controls, Universal Purchase
  3. Asus ExpertBook Ultra With Intel Core Ultra X7 Series 3 CPU Launched in India Alongside ExpertBook P3, ExpertBook P5 Series
  4. Boat Aavante Prime X Soundbar Launched in India With Dolby Atmos, Wireless Satellite Speakers: Price, Features
  5. Qualcomm CEO Reportedly Visits Samsung Foundry in Korea to Discuss Producing 2nm Chips
  6. Coinbase Announces USDC-INR Trading Services for Users in India
  7. Redmi K Pad 2 Launched With 8.8-Inch 3K Display, Dimensity 9500 Chip: Price, Specifications
  8. Suyodhana OTT Release Date: When and Where to Watch This Telugu Mystry Thriller Online?
  9. OnePlus Watch 4 Launch Appears Imminent as Listing Confirms Snapdragon W5 Chip, OxygenOS Watch 8
  10. Sennheiser CX 80U, Sennheiser HD 400U With USB Type-C Connectivity Launched in India: Price, Features
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.